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Shostakovich

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UberLutheran

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The first book, especially. There is some wonderful music in that set, especially the Preludes and Fugues in G, D, A, e minor and g-sharp minor; but there is also some very fine music in book two (F-sharp major, D-Flat Major, A-Flat Major, d minor).

Hard to believe that Shostakovich was almost thrown into a gulag for writing those pieces: they led to his formal denunciation by the Communist Party for writing "formalist" music.

You may or may not know that Stalin had a phone installed directly from the Kremlin to Shostakovich's apartment. Although he obviously couldn't say so at the time, Shostakovich was overjoyed when Stalin died in 1953!
 
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Fletcher84

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Has anyone read Ian Macdonald's The New Shostakovich?
Yes, I've read the book "The New Shostakovich".

It discusses the controversy begun by Solomon Volkov: was Shostakovich a commited communist or was he a dissident of the Stalinist regime, coming down on the side of the latter (the received opinion nowadays)?

In fact he was probably both and, since he had his own personal demons to cope with, the fraughtness of some of his music could have many causes.

I think that the writer may have some connection with the pop-music world, but I could be wrong about this.
 
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